1
The contribution Madame’s former students made to the development of netball,
in schools, colleges and factories
Madame’s Reports, during the 1890s, record that several old students introduced basket-ball to the schools where
they were teaching in the mid 1890s.
In 1895, her report recorded that Meta Howie (1895) was teaching basket-ball at Hamilton House, Tunbridge Wells.
The 1901 census recorded she was still teaching at the school so she may well have continued to encourage the
sport.
Annie Hardy (1894) had started the game at about the same time at St Katharines School, the prep school of St
Leonards, in St Andrews, Annie submitted the following to Madame, for her report in 1896-98:
Elsie Impey (1897) sent this account of her work to Madame which was published in the 1896-98 Report. Elsie
mentioned successfully acquiring a suitable space in order to introduce the game to factory girls to help them keep
warm, enlisting the help of some local boys in the process. (Ethel Kershaw was an exact contemporary of Elsie’s at
Dartford.)
Elsie Impey’s father,
Frederick Impey, was
Managing Director of a printing
works called White and Pike,
originally in Moor Street,
Birmingham. It moved to
Longbridge in 1894.
The firm were developing a
process of printing, in
colour, on tin.
Else’s efforts to interest
factory girls in
basket-ball must have
been one of the
earliest attempts to
do so.
© The Ӧsterberg Collection
© The Ӧsterberg Collection
2
Hanna Flyborg, from Sweden and one of Madame’s own students,
probably attended Ester Porter’s sessions at Dartford. She sailed to
Baltimore immediately after completing her training in 1897. Hannah
worked as an instructress at the Women’s College of Baltimore, founded
in 1885. (Later known as Goucher College.) Madame included a long
report from Hanna in her 1896-98 Report. A small extract is included here:
The students there had already been introduced to basketball two years
before Hanna’s arrival and she helped to coach and umpire the game at
the college. Hanna also taught Swedish gymnastics and introduced
hockey four years before Miss Constance Applebee taught the game at
a summer school at Harvard.
In 1898 Hanna was invited to join Madame’s staff and she may well have
taught students basketball on her return to college.
Ethel Stevenson (1892) commented in Madame’s1896-98 Report that
her Headmistress at Highbury School, in London, took a great interest in
games and so she had been able to introduced basket-ball. (This was an
early G.P.D.S.Co. school and it is possible that the Headmistress was a
Miss Mary A.A. Minasi.) It is interesting to note that Ethel was
one of Madame’s students who had not played basket ball at college but had still chosen to teach the game in a girls’
school.
Winifred Simmons (1893) was appointed to the Skinner’s School for Girls in Stamford Hill, London when she left
college. Madame’s report indicated she had started basket-ball at the large games club founded at Skinner’s School.
Florence Sophie Simpson (1896) had introduced basket-ball at The Mount School, York, before she left the school in
1898 to undertake home duties.
Elsie Feesey (1897) taught at St Margaret’s, Folkestone. They had adopted an enthusiastic approach to physical
activity at an early stage and it is worth noting that basketball had been introduced by old students. It was a school run
by the mother of one of Madame’s future students, Bertha De la Mare (1901).
© The Ӧsterberg Collection
Hanna Flyborg
© The Ӧsterberg Collection
3
The Ling Association
Ida M. Webb’s research for Women's Physical Education in Great Britain 1800-1965, her M.Ed. thesis for the
University of Leicester in 1967, revealed:
By 1904, the (Ling) Association was conducting its own examination and issuing a Diploma in Physical Training.
This continued until 1931. All holders became eligible for membership of the Association, widening of conditions
for membership of the Association. The Association was founded by women and run by them for many years,
although men trained in Sweden in the early days, could apply for membership.
Members of the Ling Association played a pivotal role in the development of netball and it is important to understand
how the organisation was created.
In January 1899 Mary Hankinson (1898) and thirty of Madame's old students met to form the Swedish Physical
Educationalists. It was intended to be an association exclusively for trained teachers of gymnastics, with Madame
Bergman Ӧsterberg as the President and figurehead. It is important to be aware that one influential member, Ethel
Adair Roberts (1898) was, by then, a member of staff at Rhoda Anstey’s college.
Unfortunately, Madame was out of the country at the time of this meeting and, on her return irate at the actions of her
old students, sent a letter to the Secretary expressing her disapproval, calling the proposed name ridiculous and
absurd. Madame indicated she could only become involved if the name was changed. This difficulty was not resolved
and, undeterred, this group of her old students, carried on, naming their organisation the Ling Association.
Ida M. Webb recorded the names of the first Office Bearers and Committee members of this new association in
Women's Physical Education in Great Britain 1800-1965. With the exception of Margaret Stansfeld who had taught at
Hampstead with Madame for a short time, they had all trained at Hampstead or Dartford.
The Officers were: Vice President, Emily Baker, Hon. Treasurer, Margaret Hankinson, and Hon. Secretary Margaret
Lucas. The Committee members were: Rhoda Anstey, by then running her own college of physical training, Theodora
Johnson, Mrs Matthews (Marion Walpole), Ethel Petty, Vida Sturge, Constance Thomas, Evelyn Spence Watson and
Hannah Williamson. Emily Baker and Hannah Williamson had been members of Madame’s staff just a year or so
earlier.
In 1900, Madame founded her own, similar organisation known as The Bergman Österberg Union of Trained
Gymnastic Teachers. She refused to co-operate with the Ling Association, in any way, for the rest of her life.
The make up of the first committee of the Ling Association could suggest a rather insular group. This was not the
case. The Ling Association appears to have been supported by the more independent thinkers. For example, a
number of Old Students, including Hannah Williamson, Evelyn Spence Watson, Vida Sturge and Ethel Adair Roberts,
had been influenced by the Society of Friends at some stage in their lives, all supported the Ling Association. Quakers
had progressive views of the role of women in society and so played an important part in early established
organisations involved with women’s rights.
The Ling Association moved forward quickly and embraced a much wider group of Swedish gymnastics teachers
extending their membership to include those trained not just by Madame Bergman Ӧsterberg. Their members
embraced new ideas by working with those trained at the new and emerging colleges such as Anstey, Bedford and
Dunfermline. These old students may have been working for Local Authorities, in state schools, in Higher Education,
or overseas, rather than in prestigious girls’ schools. The Ling Association members were looking ahead with their
progressive ideas of registration, inspections, holiday courses and meetings which embraced what would now be
thought of as personal development.
Madame’s former students, who taught in the well known girls’ boarding schools which emphasised the benefits of
games, are conspicuously absent from these lists. Maybe the Headmistresses of these schools wished to make sure
Madame would continue to send them her best students to join their staff. Miss Schermanson, trained in Stockholm
and appointed in 1891 to be responsible for gymnastics at St Leonards, did join the Ling Association, whereas her
colleagues who had trained at Dartford did not.
The Ling Association was well supported by Madame’s students who left college 1897 and 1898 and so they had
experienced the birth of netball at Dartford. Their vision to develop a standard set of rules for netball, which could be
used by all schools and groups wishing to play, was far reaching. Mary Hankinson and Ethel Adair Roberts were very
involved in this work. The Ling Netball Association Sub-Committee was put in place to achieve this. In 1901 the rules
were published and rule books circulated. It was the Ling Association members who were firmly in the driving seat in
the roll out of netball to schools and colleges.
4
The influence of the Ling Association on the growth of the game of Net-Ball
The Secretary of the Ling Association of Gymnastic Teachers, Mary Hankinson (1898), became a significant figure
as the game of net-ball evolved. She had presented a paper on 18th June 1909 at the Annual Meeting of the Net-
Ball Association of the London Girls' Public Secondary Schools, which was held at Roan School for Girls in
Greenwich. (The Headmistress, Miss Mary Spaulding Walker,
© The Ӧsterberg Collection
Photograph from Ethel Adair Robert’s album
one of the founding members of the London Inter-Schools Net-
Ball Association.)
Mary set out the way net-ball had developed since her own 1898
set had left Madame's college. The paper was published in The
Journal of Scientific Physical Training Vol II No 5 Spring 1910, a
magazine started and edited by Ethel Adair Roberts. This gave
Mary’s talk a much wider audience.
In 1900 Ethel Adair Roberts (1898) was a member of the Ling
Association’s first sub-committee to determine the rules of the
new game. They were accepted and published in 1901. Mary
substantiated Ethel’s claim that her father, Mr Adair Roberts, had
suggested attaching a net to the rings on the netball posts to help
the umpires determine whether or not a goal had been scored.
At this stage the name of the game changed to Net Ball.
The details from this report are included as she outlined how the
game developed after the girls in the 1898 set at Madame’s
college explored ways to add the game to the curriculum in
schools. It provided the background to the way schools
embraced the game, particularly in the GPDS Co schools .
Mary Hankinson outlined how the net-ball rules became
standardised:
It is significant that Mary Hankinson explained:
As we had made so many changes from the American rules, and as we had given up the baskets for nets and rings, we called the game Net Ball.
It is clear that the Ling Association had taken on the responsibility for standardising the rules. However, that meant
the rules of the new game were being drawn up by members of an association who had all received training at one
of the accepted colleges of physical training. They inevitably shared similar experiences, held the same views and
may not have had much, if any, exposure to schools in deprived areas. This eventually changed as more people from
a variety of schools and then clubs became involved in the game of netball.
5
Mary Hankinson’s article contained considerable detail about rules and reasons for the changes made from time to
time. For example, she said originally players could hold the ball for five seconds but this was changed to three
seconds in 1904.
It was not universally popular as the Girls’ Public Day School Trust Games Association made a special bye law to
accept the Ling Association rules with the exception of the three second rule. Later they agreed to play by the more
universal rules.
The chart below explained how the distribution of players was changed in 1905. The number of players, in the
shooting/defending third, was reduced from three to two per side. This was to prevent overcrowding in the circle.
The game was becoming more widely played. Mary Hankinson mentioned that in 1901 the Ling Association published
250 rule books. Next came a print run of 1000, increasing until they reached 2,500. She said they were supplied to
many companies making games equipment including Spalding's and Gamages. The first rule books were distributed
to England, Scotland, Ireland and Wales and to a few schools in France and South Africa.
The Ling Association did consult with teachers about changes to the rules and they also had aspirations for the future
of their game. Mary Hankinson outlined her ideas. She hoped Net Ball would become like the AEWHA, with guidance
coming from what we would now call a national governing body.
The final sentence, in the text above, makes it clear that the Girls’ Public Day School Games Association was a
separate group from the G.P Secondary School. This latter group, who Mary Hankinson addressed at their AGM at
the Roan Girls’ Secondary School in Greenwich were presumably known more formally as the Net Ball Association
of the London Girls' Public Secondary Schools. (In 1909 it was likely that the definition of a Public Secondary School
was that it had a Governing Body, rather than being a privately run establishment.)
6
School Basket Ball/Net Ball
Mary Hankinson’s article explained how the game progressed between 1901 and 1909.
One of the first girls’ schools to show an interest in the new game of basket-ball was The North London Collegiate
School. They did not have a link with Madame’s college, but they began to play in 1889. A school magazine available
on line, suggests a tenuous link with an Old North Londoner, Gertrude Longbotham, who was awarded a scholarship
to work at Bryn Mawr College, in Pennsylvania. Gertrude wrote a letter, which was published in the April 1898 edition
of the school magazine. It included a description of basket-ball as played at Bryn Mawr College:
The game here is basket-ball, played by 2 opposing teams on a ground with a goal basket at each end,
mounted on a pole 8 foot high. The ball, which is about the size of a football, is thrown from one to another…
I have seen it played two or three times, and do not care for it at all, as it seems very rough.
In the same edition of the magazine, the Games Club Committee invited suggestions for a new game to be played
in the gymnasium. By March 1899, The North London Collegiate School Magazine, under the heading Games Club
recorded:
The game of Basket-ball, which is very popular in some parts of America, but which has not yet found much
favour in England, has been introduced this term.
By July 1901 the game had attained popularity and there was a hope that teams would be organised and matches
played against other schools. By December that vision had been realised and matches were played against
Skinners’ School, Stamford Hill. The names of the positions were listed as throwers (2) centres (3) and defenders
(3).
In March 1902, a reference to the Autumn Term 1901, indicated basket-ball was being played very vigorously and
matches had been held against North Lodge and Stamford Hill Senior and Junior teams. Winifred Simmons
(Hampstead 1893) who had taught at Skinners’, Stamford Hill had left to marry by 1900.
In February 1902 The North London Collegiate School played a basket-ball game against Coburn School. There
could be a possible link here with Ethel Stevenson (Hampstead 1892). In Madame’s report 1898, Ethel indicated
she taught gymnastics at Coburn School but they were to move to new and larger premises in the autumn, where
there would be more space. However, Ethel was not so interested in games. (A letter, from Ethel’s father addressed
to Madame, held in The Ӧsterberg Collection explained Ethel wished to leave St Leonards after only two terms in
1892, because she wished to teach gymnastics, At St Leonards she had responsibility for games but not for
gymnastics.)
Sophie Nicholls, the step niece of the Headmistress, Sara Bryant, wrote in Reminiscences of the school in its Early
Year:
An account of the visit to
Madame Bergman Ӧsterberg’s
College written by
Muriel Nicholls, the basket-ball
captain,
was published in
The North London Collegiate
Magazine in 1902.
Muriel’s article recorded that
the game was played out of
doors and the final score was
15 all.
Muriel stated that all the
players received a bunch of
bluebells as they departed.
© The North London Collegiate School
7
Wimbledon High School was another London girls’ school which started basket- ball in 1899-1900 but they did have
a little assistance from college.
Their school magazine published in April 1900 recorded:
At the beginning of last summer three ladies from Mdme Bergman Ӧsterberg’s Physical Training College at
Dartford Heath, came to teach us Basket-Ball. It was enthusiastically taken up by all.
There is an indication that schools assisted each other. In the school magazine published in March 1902 a Basket
Ball Club report indicated that Wimbledon challenged Maida Vale to a match in the summer term 1901 but:
The latter invited them to give them a demonstration instead, as they had only just begun to play and were
unsure of the rules. Girls from both teams therefore accepted an invitation to a friendly game.
Miss Hastings, the Headmistress of Wimbledon High School, delivered a report about the successes of her school at
the Annual Meeting in December 1902. It was published in the 1903 school magazine. She said:
A very spirited and numerous Club are now devoted to Basket Ball (or Net Ball); and the London Schools have
begun to play this game against one another, the age of players being limited to 14.
The magazine also mentioned that during the Summer Term 1901 a match was played against Sutton and in
September that year a game against Maida Vale. The publication recorded that Mr Felix Clay, a Member of Council
of the GPDS Co:
has presented a Basket-Ball Cup to be competed for by teams under 14 from the various schools of the GPDS
Co.
Wimbledon H.S. played Highbury High School in this competition but were defeated. (Highbury High School were the
eventual winners.) The Under 16 team played Sydenham. This gives a clear indication that more schools were joining
in and starting to play matches against one another. Some competitions were becoming age specific.
In 1905 the Wimbledon High School magazine recorded that netball was being played in 1904 by the following schools
in the GPDS Co league: Streatham Hill, Dulwich, Kensington, Notting Hill, Sutton, Croydon, Clapham. Juniors were
playing matches against Blackheath, Maida Vale, South Hampstead
Also in 1905 the name of the game played at Wimbledon High School changed to Net Ball. One fixture that year worth
noting is that the Wimbledon team played Chelsea Polytechnic. By then East Putney, Blackheath, Maida Vale and
Highbury, had been added to the league for the junior teams, Highbury winning the competition in 1905.
In 1906 St Paul’s Girls School joined in and played netball against Wimbledon High School. In 1909 Wimbledon High
School were proud winners of the London and Suburban Schools' Games Association Junior Netball Cup. The
magazine that year reported:
Great was the rejoicing when the Junior Team bore home in triumph the Cup which we had striven in vain to
win for seven years.
In a review of sport at the school from 1894–1904 The Wimbledon High School Magazine stated :
that the biggest revolution that took place in the school was the appointment of a Dartford physically trained
mistress, Miss Mullings.
Caroline Gwendoline Mullings left college in 1904 and remained on the staff at Wimbledon until 1912. She then
went to South Africa and spent the rest of her career working there.
Notting Hill and Ealing Magazines recorded the start of netball in their school magazine dated March 1906. This
became possible by the reorganisation of some gardens.
The garden of No. 152, Holland Park Avenue has been combined with that of 52, Norland Square, to form a
gravelled playground, extensive enough to permit of the practice of net ball.
We were defeated in the first round for the Net Ball Challenge Cup by Clapham. Our Junior Team were
defeated by Streatham in their Cup Match.
By 1907 it was possible to record that the standard was improving.
Florence Gadesden, Headmistress of Blackheath High School, was instrumental in creating a Games Association for
the London schools. Kathleen McCrone in Playing the Game said Florence Gadesden set up leagues for 15 schools
for tennis, 15 for hockey and 12 for netball, from 1904. The netball league may have been made up of schools listed
on this page.
8
The Central Newcastle High School began to play basket ball in about 1906. Inter-form matches featured but
comments suggested that the girls did not practise sufficiently. The game did progress and in 1916 the fixture list
included Bede Collegiate, Rutherford College, Newcastle High School and Sunderland High School. The season
1918-1919 was described as disappointing as the school closed during the autumn term because of the influenza
outbreak and in the spring term numbers fell off for the same reason.
Manchester High School were playing by the mid 1900s. Phyllis Spafford, a pupil, but later Principal of Bedford PTC, and very involved with the AEWNA was quoted in the Manchester High School Magazine in December 1907:
Basket ball is the most popular game with over 100 participants who are beginning to realise that there is a
great deal of science in the game; that Basket Ball is not merely a fight for the ball where might is right.
House matches began at St Felix, Southwold in 1910. Miss Lucy Silcox, formerly Headmistress of the High School,
Dulwich, had recently been appointed the Headmistress. Dulwich was a member of the GPDS Co netball league.
Miss Bertha Steedman, the games mistress at Dulwich, joined her in Southwold and it seems reasonable to assume
she introduced netball to St Felix. It was a supplementary game rather than a major one at St Felix. This does
introduce the idea that, as Headmistresses and games staff moved from school to school, they influenced the games
their girls played. Miss Steedman was a member of the Ling Association but was one of a very small number of their
members listed as having received Private Training. (She may have been accepted by Ling as she was a talented
tennis player. Between 1889 and 1899 she had won nine doubles titles at the All England Championships.)
In 1999, Kelvin John Street in his thesis Female culture in physical training colleges 1885-1918 stated that the schools
listed below were playing netball by 1911. His source was the Girls’ Public Schools Year Book 1911. Some schools
may well have started before this date. However, it gives an indication of the growing number of schools taking up
the sport. The names, and year of graduation of the former Dartford students are included:
Tunbridge High School, where Adeline Brooke Smith 1911 was teaching, Wakefield High School, where Irene M.
Cooke (1906) was teaching and Wycombe Abbey School where Hilda Ness Walker (1908) was working. Other
schools mentioned were the Royal School, Bath, Bedford Modern School, Bradford Girls Grammar School, Croydon
High School, South Hampstead High School, Highbury High School, Queen Elizabeth’s Grammar School and
Rochester Grammar School for Girls.
Bedales School recorded in December 1914 that their girls were learning netball. Other schools began after World
War I. Heathfield, one of the very early schools to play lacrosse, began to play netball matches in 1920. Clifton High
School was playing by 1920 as a photograph, of their netball team in 1920-21, featured on a post card, was for sale
on ebay. Another internet find was a photograph of girls attending the Barrett Street Trade School in London, (set up
on the site of the redundant Henrietta Elementary School) playing netball on the roof of their building in 1928. It was
safely covered over.
Works groups were also embracing the game. The Bournville Works Magazines 1907, 1908, 1910 reported netball
games between men and girls. England Netball has a photograph of girls playing netball at Bourneville in 1910.
Some factories employed staff to teach the female workers drill and games. For example, the following Dartford old
students undertook this work:
Millicent Procter (1899) at Rowntree's factory in York in 1902 and Brynhild Benson (1910) at Rowntree's in I913.
Rosalind Home (1910) was employed by Boots Cash Chemists, in Nottingham, in 1913 and Muriel Moir (1908) worked
at Fry’s Chocolate factory in Bristol, during World War I. Cicely M. Egles (1915) worked at Reckitt’s Co. in Hull and
Joyce E. Cobbald (1915) was employed by Cadbury’s in Birmingham in 1918. It is not known if they introduced or
encouraged netball but they may well have done so.
Rob Langham in The North Eastern Railway in the First World War suggested netball teams existed in the munitions
factories during World War I but he provided no details or where or when.
Colman’s Carrow Works Magazine Archive includes a mention of netball amongst a list of sports teams which existed
between 1906 and 1912. This archive is linked to the Colman’s mustard factory in Norwich.
Joyce Caley (1913) was the granddaughter of the founder of Caleys in Norwich. They sold chocolates, crackers and
sparkling water, but there is no evidence that they provided recreational facilities for their workers.
Factories run by members of The Society of Friends, were particularly anxious to promote the health of their work
forces and they provided excellent opportunities, facilities and encouragement for both men and women to play
sports.
9
The Specialist Colleges of Physical Training/Education
Dartford, Chelsea, Bedford and Dunfermline Colleges had all embraced netball by 1905 but Anstey, who had
introduced the game in 1902, with the help of Ethel Adair Roberts, found it difficult to find fixtures. Colin Cruden in
his book, A History of Anstey College of Physical Education 1897-1972 wrote:
The netball teams, suffered from the fact that few local schools had taken up the game. For a number of years
Bournville was the only outside team which the college met, but in 1909 Queen Mary’s High School Walsall
was added to the list and King Edward’s Handsworth in 1916.
In 1908 the College Games Report recorded netball continues to be a popular college game and in 1910 included
that a good many girls’ schools are now playing netball with the prospect of more matches in the future.
A footnote, at the end of the chapter two of Colin Cruden’s book, stated that the first recorded games Anstey
students played against Bournville, which ran hockey, netball and cricket teams was in 1903.
Photographic evidence of basket-ball or netball being played at the colleges is scant but Bedford Physical Training
College have photographs of netball matches being played in 1905 and in 1907..
An advertisement for Madame Bergman Ӧsterberg’s
College was inserted in The Hockey Field on 30th
November 1905. It listed the games played as:
lawn tennis, cricket, hockey, lacrosse, basket-ball etc.
At the foot of the page the advertisement mentions Madame
Bergman Ӧsterberg’s Union of Trained Gymnastics
Teachers.
The diary of Jean Milligan, written during her time at
Madame’s college, probably in her junior year, 1905-1906,
does include a reference to basket-ball being played at that
time. Informal competitions were organised between the
students in A and B Studies. Jean mentioned, dancing,
commanding, basket-ball and lacrosse. (The diary is held
by the Scottish Country Dance Society in Edinburgh.)
Information about netball at Dartford, at this time, is difficult
to find. When Cordelia Gellatly (1911) wrote to her former
school, George Watson’s College, Edinburgh, in her Senior
year about her experience at college she made no mention
of netball.
The photographs included in student’s albums, such as the one kept by Katherine Rigold (1909—1911), photographs
from the Helen Stewart Walker collection (1912-1914) and the Phyllis Mears’ album (1911-1914) do not include any
images of netball but cricket, hockey, lacrosse and gymnastics do feature strongly. The collection donated by Dorothy
Davies (1909-1911) includes named team photographs but there are none of netball.
In the Student Record Book, Norah Strathairn (1912) by then the assistant games coach, (or perhaps someone else)
wrote comments against the names of the girls who entered college in 1914 and were listed as ready in 1916. Their
ability, or lack of, in hockey, lacrosse, cricket, tennis, dancing and swimming is noted, the school teams these girls
played in were also listed but netball is not mentioned. This is surprising as the schools these students attended
included: St Paul’s, Blackheath High School and Newcastle High School. These schools are recorded starting the
game by 1912. This was still during the era of Madame and so not linked in anyway to a change of leadership. Netball
may have become a supplementary game at college. Perhaps played so students learned how to introduce and
develop the game, in the schools where they went to work.
The inaugural Bergman Ӧsterberg Union magazine, published in 1917, made reference to a Games Club for Old
Students and a netball match, played against Greycoat School, which the students lost 21-6. In 1910 Chelsea
Physical Training College had not only a netball team but also a Past Students team. The Hockey Field recorded a
match on 12th November which the Past Students won by 7 goals to 6. On 8th November Chelsea Physical Training
College played the Old North Londoners’ Athletic Club. Chelsea won by 11 goals to 8.
Bedford Physical Training College 1907
© University of Bedfordshire,
Bedford Physical Education Archive
10
In 1901, rule books were distributed to England, Scotland, Ireland and Wales and to a few schools in France
and South Africa
Information about the early development of netball in Scotland is limited. The Netball Scotland website states:
Netball Scotland, formerly the Scottish Netball Association, was founded in 1946. At this time most
netball was played in the Glasgow and Lanarkshire area, but since this date, the game has spread throughout
Scotland
Jean Milligan (1907) was enthusiastic about netball. In her autobiography, Dance with your soul, it was stated:
Dartford trained teachers in and around Glasgow formed a netball team which often played matches against teams of senior school pupils.
St Columba’s, Kilmacolm played basket ball in 1909 and held fixtures with Beltrees School, Greenock. It is possible that Hamilton Academy may have been one of the schools who played netball in about 1912 with Jean Milligan.
Elinor Steel, in her thesis, The historical and contemporary role of physical activity and sport for women: a study of netball in Scotland, completed in 2000, made reference to the role Ethel Impey (sic) had in the introduction of the game at Dunfermline. She also drew her reader’s attention to the publication of a, probably, long forgotten book:
A decade after the publication of the Ling Association rules, B.H. Grieve (1911) wrote ‘The Game of Netball
and How to Play it’. Her book demonstrated that netball was still being played with teams of five, seven or nine
players, all with varying sizes of court (AENA 1926, Jobling & Barham 1991).
However, the 1907 Ling Association Magazine indicated that they published Hints on the Game of Netball in 1906
written by B.H. Grieve, which predated her more detailed book in 1911.
Miss Betha H. Grieve was the first physical training instructor employed by Bournville Works. This was documented
in the Bournville Works Magazine in 1903 and mentioned in Netball Historical Notes. The Post Office Directories for
Aberdeen show Betha Helen Greive was employed by the Aberdeen Provincial Committee for the Training of Teachers
from at least 1908 to 1913. Miss B. Grieve is also mentioned as a member of the Ling Association Sub - Committee
in the1913 edition of The Ling Association Magazine.
The Net Ball Sub-committee consisted of Miss B. Grieve, Miss Bache, Miss Stables, and Miss Hankinson, with
representatives from the Girls' Public Day Schools Net Ball Association, the Net Ball Association of the London
Girls' Public Secondary Schools, and the Northern Schools Net Ball Association. The Rules were revised, and
a new edition published in September.
The Ling Association Magazines throw more light on Betha Grieve’s career and family. She completed her training at
Anstey College in 1902. (Her name appears on the 1901 census as a student when Ethel Adair Roberts was a member
of staff.) Betha’s sister, Margaret Bruce Grieve, gained a Ling Association Diploma and completed her training at
Dunfermline College in 1907. Branxholm Park, in Roxburghshire was their family home. Margaret Grieve was
appointed to the staff of Dunfermline College and, was seconded to the Scottish Education Department in 1913. There
is no indication that schools in Aberdeen or Edinburgh were playing netball at that time.
An entry in the Ling Association Magazine in 1913 indicated rounders had joined the Ling Netball Sub-Committee. It
is worth noting that new netball associations had been set up.
Although St Katharines in St Andrews, played their old girls in 1910 and maybe other school arranged similar games
or inter forms matches, it seems that netball did not become popular in Scotland until after WWI.
A lack of equipment for hockey may have been the catalyst for one school. The Veritas’ Magazine 2001, published
by Hutchesons’ Grammar School, Glasgow quoted a pupil, Margaret Alston, who had to play netball:
Our first year (1918-19) class did not play hockey - there was not a hockey stick to be bought in the whole of
the country.
11
Australia and New Zealand
It is generally accepted that basket-ball arrived in Australia around 1900. A photograph published in The Town and
Country Journal, on 21st September 1904, and headed The Basket Game, shows girls wearing hats, playing at the
Superior Public School Parramatta South School, now known as the Arthur Phillip High School, Parramatta NSW.
There is a suggestion that basket–ball reached Tasmania in 1890 and was played by girls, and some boys, during
the winter. This has not been verified but the Headmistress of Tormore mentioned the game being played in Hobart
in 1903. (See below.)
A photograph exists of girls playing a netball/basket-ball type game in New Zealand in 1900.
Despite a search, on behalf of an Australian author, no evidence has been found to link the start of basket-ball/
netball in Australia to Madame’s college. Gwynneth Morris (1906) attempted to introduce basket-ball at the Melbourne
Girls’ Grammar School in 1908 but the game did not become popular there. In about 1912 Gwynneth wrote an article
called Physical Training for Girls:
As far as possible, a girl should be allowed to play the game of her choice, but if health does not permit her to
take part in the more strenuous games of hockey, lacrosse, or cricket, then she should be encouraged to take
part in milder forms of exercise, such as tennis, baseball, basket-ball, with just as much vigour. Every girl in
the school should be expected to play one game regularly, unless a doctor’s certificate is presented to testify
that she is physically unfit.
In 1908 Jessie May Thomson (1906) joined Gwynneth at the Melbourne Girls Grammar School. Jessie introduced
basket ball at Tintern School in Melbourne. Sport in Victoria, A History, recorded that girls in 5B, in April 1912, wrote
in a school magazine:
Last drill day Miss Thomson gave us a lesson in basketball, instead of usual work, we enjoyed it very
much...and we had a good game.
At Tormore School in Adelaide, the Headmistress, Caroline Jacobs, announced in 1903 that:
Herr Leschen had introduced basket ball and I hope we shall derive as much pleasure and benefit from it as
our friends in Hobart and Melbourne.
Caroline Jacobs was the great aunt of sisters Silvia Cowles (1903) and Denise Cowles (1905). It is known that she
knew the Morris sisters at the girls Grammar School, perhaps through her great niece, Denise, but it is not known
who her contacts were in Hobart.
Florence Joyce Loxdale (1908) was appointed to teach at Tormore School in Adelaide when she completed her
training. It has been suggested that Florence was the first of Madame’s students to be appointed to a school in South
Australia. (Denise Cowles was involved in the recruitment of a successor for Florence.)
In a thesis, with the title Age of Transition. A study of South Australian Private Girls Schools 1875—1925, written in
1996 by Helen M.J. Reid, the name Dartmouth College should be Dartford College. Her text included:
In 1908 Miss Toxdale, (sic) a specialist from England’s Dartmouth College (sic)...was appointed to
Tormore… She gave two lessons a week to each class and introduced a variety of games including hockey,
cricket and basket ball.
In 1913, a Miss Mary E. Newton (Anstey 1904) replaced Florence at Tormore but returned to England in 1917.
Surprisingly, in February 1903 an interview with Madame Bergman Ӧsterberg was published in the Timaru Herald.
The article highlighted her work at Dartford, but basket-ball/netball was not one of the games mentioned.
By 1909, Miss Mary Fraser, (Anstey 1906) was teaching at the Girls High School, Westella, Hobart, Tasmania and
Evelyn Colpays Gedge, (Anstey 1906) was at the Diocesan H.S, Auckland, NZ. Netball was introduced St Hilda’s
School, Dundein in 1912. Zoe Sanderson (1913) taught the game there in 1917.
Dunfermline trained, Winifred D. Livingstone, was appointed to Woodford House School, North Island, New Zealand
where she taught between 1912–1917. News from old students who attended Dunfermline College indicates that
Winifred taught netball in 1913. Olive Daniells (1918) took over from her. Olive was expected to join the staff in 1918,
when she completed her training but she could not arrange a passage until 1919. Correspondence exits between
Miss Greene, by then the Principal, and Miss Mabel Hodge, the Headmistress. Miss Hodge seemed aspirational and
influenced by the school curriculum in the UK as the prospectus stated netball and lacrosse were played at the
school. (Lacrosse was given up in 1915 to concentrate on hockey.)
12
The founding of the All England Women’s Net Ball Association
In 1926, the AEWNA netball archive recorded that the All England Women’s Net Ball Association was formed at a
meeting. attended by 230 people in the drawing room of the YMCA in Tottenham Court Road, London, under the
chairmanship of Miss Edith Thompson, CBE.
A provisional committee consisted of five representatives from the Ling Association: The Misses Bache, Hankinson,
Newbold, Read and Wilkie plus five representatives from the London and Home Counties Net Ball Federation: Mrs
Gould, Mrs Lavender and the Misses Milman, O’Reilly and Shipperbottom. In the first season twelve leagues and
twenty one clubs affiliated.
The Ling Association representatives were Florence Lydia Gertrude Bache (Anstey 1901), Mary Hankinson (MBӦ’s
1898), Muriel O. Newbold (Anstey 1904), Cecily Reid (Bedford 1911), who was later appointed Principal of Bedford
Physical Training College, and Dorette Wilkie, Principal of Chelsea College of Physical Training.
It has been possible to research more details about the representatives from London and Home Counties Net Ball
Federation as a slide, shown by Dr Samantha-Jayne Oldfied during a presentation she delivered, in 2017, from
Manchester Metropolitan University, provided some very useful first names.
Daphne E.D.H. Milman (Queen Alexander’s House Physical Training College) came from a very aristocratic family.
Her father was Clerk to the House of Commons and her grandfather, Henry Hart Milman, is buried in Westminster
Abbey.
Anne Winefride O’Reilly, Honorary Organiser (Avery Hill Teacher Training College) was a student at the college in
1911, training to be an Elementary teacher. She had a distinguished career and was awarded an MBE for her work
in the Borough of Southwark. A blue plaque was awarded on Walworth Academy, London SE17. (https://
remakingenglish.wordpress.com/2011/10/06/anne-oreilly-blue-plaque-at-walworth-academy/ This website mentions
that she was a founding member of the AEWNA.)
Abigail Shipperbottom, Treasurer (Edge Hill Teacher Training College) may have been an assistant mistress at
Stanley Higher Grade School, London, between 1903 and1906 and then at the Municipal Secondary School West
Ham from 1906. It was not possible to trace Mrs Lavender and Mrs Gould.
Contained in another slide, created by Dr Oldfield for her presentation reproduced here, is a document which lists
those present at a AEWNA Council Meeting
in June 1929. Dr Oldfield suggested that the
Ling Association handed over their control of
the rules to this group in 1929.
Representatives had been added at this
time from new groups:
London University, the National Playing
Fields Association, the Y.M.C.A., the
Northern Schools Net Ball Association,
(founded in 1913) the Civil Service Netball,
and the London Secretary Schools.
The names of the 1929 Committee members
of the AEWNA in the document, provide
valuable information about these additional
members who brought a variety of
experience to the developing organisation:
Dorothy Lebbon was a student at London
University. Phyllis Spafford, (Bedford
Physical Training College 1910) represented the National Playing Fields Association. Bessie Lee Singleton came from
Lancashire. Winifred Legg, (MBӦ’s 1913) had played lacrosse for England in 1913, 1917, 1920 and 1921. She
published a book, Lacrosse for Beginners in 1924 and in 1927 was elected as a member of the Ling Council. In 1928
she was appointed to the staff of Chelsea College of Physical Training and she remained in post until 1942. Winifred
had links with a variety of different groups: The Ling Association, lacrosse and Chelsea College. There was no specific
affiliation listed against her name.
13
Norah Waterhouse had followed her father and brother into the Civil Service. As a schoolgirl she was living in West
Kensington. She is recorded on the 1939 Register as a Civil Servant. It has not been possible to find out any more
about E.M. Richards but J.C. Taylor seems to have been the representative for the London and Home Counties
Netball Federation which had been set up by Anne Winifriede O’Reilly in 1924.
E.R. Clarke’s experience in a variety of fields was legendary. She had been a games coach at Madame’s college
between 1908 - 1915 when, at this point she became a temporary HMI. (During this period she had been sent to
Hellerau, near Dresden by Madame, to learn something of the work of Dalcroze but returned because of the outbreak
of war.) She resumed her work at Dartford and was then appointed an HMI and later a staff inspector.
E.R. was also a very talented tennis player and reached the semi finals at Wimbledon with her doubles partner. She
became a council member of the National Playing Fields Association. E.R. Clarke was well known to women
interested in sport in America as she contributed articles to Constance Applebee’s publication The Sportswoman. It
was published twice a month between 1924 and 1936.
E.R. Clarke may not have played netball at a high level herself but it is easy to see why the netball enthusiasts
wanted to make her their President.
Her entry in The Ӧsterberg Collection Hall of Fame is also worth noting.
She played hockey for England between 1909 and 1912 and again after WWI. She was on the Council of the
AEWHA. Not only was she a founding member of the Ladies Lacrosse Association in 1912 she was also
influential in the founding of the Scottish Ladies Lacrosse Association in 1920/1921. E.R. was a talented
games player and she played tennis at Wimbledon and also cricket for the WCA in 1929. She was a very well
respected hockey coach and in 1921 she was one of five AEWHA coaches who went to America for six weeks
to help develop and coach hockey.
Dr Oldfield has suggested, quite correctly, that by 1929, Net Ball was no longer in the hands of the Dartford Old
Students who had been so closely involved in the birth of the game, at Kingsfield, in the mid 1890s. The AEWNA
brought in people with a variety of backgrounds and experience, notably some who had not attended a specialist
college of physical education
At some stage, Marjorie Pollard, (St Peter’s Teacher Training College, Saltley), best known as a sports journalist
became involved and she edited the first edition of the Official AEWNA Magazine in 1933.
The founding of the AEWNA came thirty years after the AEWHA created their association in 1895 after an official
international game against Ireland. Christabel Lawrence (1887), by then teaching at Roedean School, was their first
Hon Sec. In 1912 the Ladies Lacrosse Association was formed. At this stage the association embraced Scotland as
well as England. It was a very school orientated group as few lacrosse clubs had started at that stage. The
Headmistress of Roedean was the President, Margaret Stansfeld was the Vice President, Miss Edith M. Thompson
and E.R Clarke were members of the first committee. Others members were games mistresses and headmistresses
of lacrosse playing schools, such as St Leonards and Wycombe Abbey. There were some women involved in the
Ladies Lacrosse Association, who later helped found the AEWNA.
The 1926 AEWNA records suggests Miss Edith M. Thompson, CBE, was the first President/Inaugural Chair. Edith
Thomson had been the founder, in 1901, of Hockey Field, a publication she edited until 1920. It came to embrace
lacrosse, netball and, even at one stage, golf and for a short time, table tennis.
Jo Haplin drew attention, in her thesis Will you walk in our parlour?: to the link between the AEWHA and the AEWNA:
the president and several other members of the AEWHA – including Mary Hankinson and Marjorie Pollard –
began involving themselves in the formation of the All England Netball Association (AENA). Thompson chaired
its inaugural meeting in 1926, while former England hockey international Edith R. Clarke became the AENA’s
first president.
In October 1926, Kathleen Doman (Dartford 1917) proposed the formation of the Women’s Cricket Association. The
first Women’s Cricket Association committee included Edith R. Clarke, Marjorie Pollard and Edith M. Thompson who,
had gained useful experience on other committees.
Whether these new, emerging associations made a conscious decision to involve those who had had previous
experience of setting up other associations is not known. The AEWNA managed to bring to their committee, women
who collectively had wide ranging experience of different sporting bodies. Others represented the new netball groups
and associations which had sprung up in different parts of the country. The balance of power now represented more
accurately, the diversity of girls and women within the population who wished to play netball.
14
Conclusion
The words inscribed on the blue plaque, fixed to the wall of Kingsfield, Dartford, state:
Netball, now an international game, was devised here by the students of the Bergman Ӧsterberg Physical
Training College.
The International Netball Federation states something very similar:
Netball was first played in England in 1895 at Madame Ostenburg’s (sic) College. In the first half of the 20th
century, Netball’s popularity continued to grow, with the game being played in many British Commonwealth
countries. There were no standard rules at that time with both nine-a-side and five-a-side versions of the game.
It became clear, while undertaking this research and uncovering new information, that members of the Ling
Association, notably Madame’s former students, Mary Hankinson (1898) and Ethel Adair Roberts (1898), (Later Mrs
Impey) were the prime movers who made the roll out of netball to schools, colleges and factories possible.
By 1901, rules had been drawn up under the Ling Association’s Netball Sub-Committee of which Ethel Adair Roberts
was Chair and were distributed to England, Scotland, Ireland and Wales and also to a few schools in France and
South Africa. The Ling Association had members who made things happen.
Madame recognised the importance of adding games to her curriculum. The Headmistresses, of the newly emerging
girls’ day and boarding schools, wished to include games in their own establishments. They were aiming to create
schools for girls, which equated to the institutions attended by their brothers, so they needed staff who could teach a
variety of games.
However, Madame knew little of games. When her college was in Hampstead she encouraged her students to play
cricket, which was played at Neasden. Some students, for example, Ethel Stevenson(1892) had been introduced to
cricket while attending Notting Hill High School. Madame employed a cricket professional to coach the girls, but
Jonathan May recorded that one old student had said that during her time at college, Madame never visited Neasden
to see her students playing games.
Hockey was introduced at Dartford in 1896, by four students who had played hockey at their former schools: The
Mount, Polam Hall, St Leonards and one unidentified school. Lacrosse had been played by Madame’s students at
Wycombe Abbey, St Felix, Southwold, Heathfield, Prior’s Field and Roedean, well before a Canadian coach was
appointed to teach lacrosse at college in 1904. These students must have helped to establish the game at Dartford.
This same pattern of students teaching a game to their peers was used when basketball was introduced to Madame’s
college. Madame Bergman Ӧsterberg brought the concept of basketball to college in 1893, after her visit to Chicago.
Her students tried it out in the Hampstead Gymnasium, where the walls formed the boundaries and so the ball always
remained in play. The future of net-ball was now in the firm grasp of the Ling Association.
In 2005
Dartford Borough Council erected their first blue plaque.
The scheme aimed to promote the area’s heritage.
It acknowledges Madame Bergman Österberg’s work
and records netball
was devised by the students of her college.
No evidence has been found to confirm that Madame Bergman Österberg founded/invented netball or taught the
game of netball to her students. Available evidence shows that she probably introduced her students to the game of
basket ball at her college. She provided them with the opportunity to develop the game and to consider the potential
of a ball game, to be played in a confined area with approximately seven players per side. Madame’s former students
and other members of The Ling Association, those trained at Anstey and elsewhere, rose to the challenge and, in
1901, under the umbrella of the Ling Association, produced and distributed a set of standardised rules for netball
which could be used in schools, colleges, factories and works association groups all over the world.
15
Post script
The Ӧsterberg Collection holds an image of girls playing netball at the William Street Girls’ School in London in
1908. This school may have later been known as West Kensington School, in Gorleston Street, London W14.
An unexpected find has been similar photographs of girls playing netball on the London Metropolitan Archive site:
https://www.magnoliabox.com/search?q=netball&type=product These show London School children playing netball.
Other photographs showing aspects of school life at these institutions are also available.
Myrdle Street Girls’ School Stepney, in London, in 1908. (Another photograph, also dated 1908, shows girls playing hockey in a playground.) The school is now Madni Secondary Girls' School,
Cable Street School in Stepney in London,1908. Boys and girls playing netball, together inside, in a gym nasium. The umpire is male. The school was founded in 1898. After World War II it became a secondary modern school, St George-in-the-East Central School.
Chelsea Secondary School, (Hortensia Road) in Chelsea, London 1911. This school opened in 1908 for girls at the South-West London Polytechnic School.
A Miss B. Wilson, who left Bedford in 1910, is listed in the Ling Association Magazines in 1912 and in 1913 as teaching at Chelsea Secondary School.
Other photographs of early games of basket-ball/netball can be found with an internet search:
Coburn 1906 netball team https://www.cooperscoborn.org.uk/1909/
Tollington High School 1910 www.englandnetball.co.uk
County Secondary School, Fulham 1910 www.layersoflondon.org
St Katherine’s, Wantage 1915 Post card for sale on e bay
West Ham Secondary School 1915-1916 www.newhamphoto.com
Clifton High School 1920-1921 Post card for sale on e bay
Barrett School Trade School 1928
https://www.magnoliabox.com/collections/london-metropolitan-archives?page=186
www.englandnetball.co.uk also features teams from the 1920s onwards.
Information re early America Basketball rules
http://www.vintagebasketball.com/home/item/spalding-women-1901/ https://sports.ha.com/itm/basketball-collectibles/others/1899-spalding-s-athletic-library-basket-ball-basketball-for- women/a/7185-80130.s This website shows a photograph of the rules dated 1899.
Doug Ackerley a sports journalist, living in Australia, provided details of a game at Parramatta in 1904. See page 23.
He has taken a keen interest in the history of the development of basket-ball/netball at Madame Bergman Ӧsterberg’s college. He had hoped to find evidence linking one of Madame’s early students to the introduction of the game in Australia, but that has not been realised. He is actively undertaking research about the history of netball in Australia. Photographs taken in 1904 at Parramatta School in NSW, were included in an article in the Australian Town and Country Journal (Sydney, NSW : 1870 - 1907), Wednesday 21 September 1904, page 35.
Netball in New Zealand
‘A girls’ game and a good one too’ - A Critical Analysis of New Zealand Netball. https://core.ac.uk/download/ pdf/35465868.pdf
Geoffrey Andrew, in his dissertation submitted in 1997 for an MA in History from Canterbury University, suggests that netball developed quite independently in New Zealand. He made reference to Miss Sanderson’s college in Dunedin. John Huggett, archivist at St Hilda’s College, Dunedin was able to confirm that Zoe Sanderson (1913) was appointed to teach at St Hilda’s School in 1917 where netball had began in 1912. Zoe also taught at Nelson College for Girls.
16
Additional information uncovered during research for this publication:
Even thirty years after the founding of the AEWNA, Ethel Adair Impey was still considered an expert on the beginnings
of the game.
The Friends Journal dated August 27th 1955 acknowledged her role in the development of a game made popular
across the world and recorded:
Ethel Adair Impey, of Northfield Meeting, England, who has just celebrated her seventy-eighth birthday, broadcast in the B.B.C. Midland Home Service on the subject of the introduction of netball for women.
Netball replaced hockey in a well known school.
Much to the horror of many hockey enthusiasts, Wycombe Abbey School gave up hockey in 1911. Two articles
published in The Hockey Field on 19th January 1911 mentioned this. This change coincided with the arrival of a new
Headmistress, Miss Annie M. Whitelaw, who took over from Miss Frances Dove.
The 1911 Girls School Year Book provides the information that netball was being played instead in 1911. Hilda Ness
Walker (1906) joined the staff at Wycombe Abbey in 1910 and so was well placed to introduce and teach netball at
the school. Educated at St Leonards she was appointed to St Katharines, the St Leonards prep school, in 1908.
Basket-ball had been introduced there by Annie Hardy (1895) by 1896 and the girls played the game with great
enthusiasm.
It has not been possible to unearth the official reason for the introduction of netball at Wycombe Abbey. However,
Godstowe, a significant feeder school for Wycombe Abbey, played both lacrosse and netball. In 1906 Violet Kirby
(1906) was appointed to teach at Godstowe. The introduction of netball at the school in 1906, seemed to coincide
with her arrival as a member of staff. Miss Whitelaw may have felt it was easier for girls transferring to Wycombe
Abbey to have experienced the same games. She may have thought it would help with recruitment or that felt netball
was better for the girls posture than hockey.
Further information available from The Ӧsterberg Collection:
Tributes to Ethel Jane Roberts (Mrs E. Adair Impey) and E.R Clarke are included in The Kingsfield Book of Remembrance.
The Ӧsterberg Collection Hall of Fame, includes a number of old students mentioned in this publication: Rhoda Anstey, E.R. Clarke, Silvia Cowles, Kathleen Doman, Hanna Flyborg, Winifred Legg, Jean Milligan, Elsie Impey and Ethel Jane Roberts (Mrs E. Adair Impey),
Articles, written and researched in 2015, provide more information about Dr Justin Kaye Toles and Miss Ester Porter of Baltimore.
Who was Dr Toles? BӦU Magazine 2015, page 61 Jane Claydon.
Miss Porter of Baltimore. Jane Claydon 2015. This article about Miss Ester Porter is available from The Ӧsterberg Collection.
The Women’s College of Baltimore. BӦU Magazine 2015 Jane Claydon. This paper provides more information about Hanna Flyborg (1897) and her work at the college in 1897-1898 which included teaching basketball.
An article in Hockey Field dated
9th February 1911 requested an
explanation of the difference
between basket ball and net
ball.
It states very clearly that net ball
is, controlled by the Ling
Association, which issues the
official rules.
17
References
Balston, Jenny The Story of St Stephen’s College. Published by The Old St. Stephenites Society. 1994
Bedford Physical Education Archive. Photograph album dated 1905-1907, catalogue reference: BPEA PH 1/2
Bottenburg, M. & J. Vermeulen (2011) Local korfball versus global basketball: a study of the relationship between sports’ rule-
making and dissemination
Claydon, Jane The Ling Association founded1899. Unpublished 2018
Godstowe The first 100 years Gresham Books 2001 (Reference to tennis, basketball and lacrosse included in an article written by
the journalist, Edith Young, soon after the school opened.)
Halpin, Joanne Will you walk into our parlour? : A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the University of
Wolverhampton for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Submission date: May 2019 https://wlv.openrepository.com/bitstream/
handle/2436/622971/Halpin_PhD_Thesis.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y
Langham. Rob The North Eastern Railway in the First World War Font Hill Meida (Munitions factories)
MacFadyen A. and Adams F. Dance with your Soul. For the Scottish Country Dance Society, Edinburgh.1982
May, Jonathan Madame Bergman-Österberg, Pioneer of Physical Education and Games for Girls and Women, George G. Harrap & Co. Ltd. for the University of London Institute of Education,1969. Pages 45 and 46
Milligan, Susan Variety without Disorder: St Columba’s School, Kilmacolm, 1897-1997. Published by the school in 1998
Nadel, Dave, and Ryan, Graeme, Editors, Sport in Victoria: a history. Ryan Publishing, 2015
Reid, Helen M.J. Reid Age of Transition. A study of South Australian Private Girls Schools 1875—1925 (Thesis submitted in
fulfilment for Ph.D. Graduate School of Education, University of Adelaide. May 1996
Scott, Margaret Engendering Loyalties: the construction of masculinities, femininities and identities in South Australian secondary
schools 1880-1919. Thesis in fulfilment of the requirement for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. University of Adelaide. August
2000
St Felix School, Southwold Archive (with assistance from two former Headmistresses of the school: Margaret Angus (1968)
and Fran D’Alcorn.)
Street, Kelvin John Female culture in physical training colleges 1885-1918. PhD Thesis 1999 De Montfort
Norfolk County Council Norfolk through a lens (Colman’s mustard. Carrow Works)
Troost, Fred Editor ...and I went on a voyage to Sweden, 100 years of Korfball, 2003
netballhistory.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/1.-History-of-Netball.pdf
The Melbourne Church of England Girls' Grammar School. 1953
The North London Collegiate School 1850-1950 A Hundred Years of Girls' Education. Essays in honour of the centenary of the
Frances Mary Buss Foundation. 1950 Geoffrey Cumberlege (Publisher to the University) Oxford University Press
http://nlcsarchives.daisy.websds.net/PDFFiles/Articles/1902December.pdf
The Ӧsterberg Collection including:
Madame Bergman Ӧsterberg’s Reports 1893, 1895, 1896-1898
Photographic collection, including Ethel Adair Robert’s album
Netball – first played at Dartford…. www.bergmanosterbergunion.org.uk/?page_id=1303
Web pages created by Rosemary Moon, Curator, The Österberg Collection
Webb, Ida M. Women's Physical Education in Great Britain 1800-1965 Dissertation M.Ed.: University of Leicester. 1967
Wycombe Abbey School Gazette 1906 Vol III No 3 Page 52
Also see:
https://www.goucher.edu/library/special-collections-and-archives/archives/ re Hanna Flyborg’s work in the USA. The College
Magazines called Donnybrook Fair can be accessed on this website.
https://www.playingpasts.co.uk/articles/gender-and-sport/womens-basketball-net-ball-an-american-game-part-6-of-7/
https://e-space.mmu.ac.uk/620812/1/Oldfield%202017%20-%20The%20origins%20and%20formation%20of 20England% 20Netball.pdf